Today: 27 June 2026
Spotify stock slips after-hours as piracy-scrape update and new features keep SPOT in focus
30 December 2025
1 min read

Spotify stock slips after-hours as piracy-scrape update and new features keep SPOT in focus

NEW YORK, December 29, 2025, 19:30 ET — After-hours

Shares of Spotify Technology S.A. (NYSE: SPOT) fell about 0.6% to $581.19 in after-hours trading — the period after the 4 p.m. ET close — after ranging between $577.29 and $586.53 earlier in the session.

The move came as Wall Street ended lower ahead of the New Year holiday, with the Nasdaq down 0.5% as heavyweight technology stocks retreated from last week’s gains, Reuters reported. Investors are also watching Federal Reserve meeting minutes and weekly jobless claims later this week in an otherwise light data calendar.

For Spotify, the pullback leaves the stock about 26% below its 52-week high of $785 and under its 50-day moving average near $615 — a short-term trend gauge based on the average closing price over the past 50 sessions.

Spotify on Monday published a year-end product recap highlighting feature launches such as lossless audio (rolling out in select markets for Premium users), a wider music video beta in North America, new Audiobooks+ add-on plans, and Spotify’s integration in ChatGPT conversations, the company said.

Separate from product news, Spotify told TechCrunch it identified and disabled user accounts involved in unlawful scraping after a piracy activist group claimed to have copied music and metadata from the platform, and said it added safeguards to curb similar attempts.

Earlier this month, Spotify said it would make music videos available to Premium subscribers in the U.S. and Canada as it challenges YouTube and other rivals for attention. “Engagement is a very important part for our measurement,” CFO Christian Luiga said at a Morgan Stanley conference, according to Reuters. Reuters

Spotify has also pushed video in other ways, including a partnership with Netflix to bring some Spotify video podcasts to Netflix users in early 2026, the companies said in October.

Investors are now looking to the company’s next earnings update: Spotify said it will post fourth-quarter results on Feb. 10 before the market opens and host an 8 a.m. ET Q&A webcast.

Management succession remains another near-term focus. Spotify has said founder Daniel Ek is set to become executive chairman on Jan. 1, with co-presidents Gustav Söderström and Alex Norström slated to become co-CEOs.

Traders will watch whether the stock stabilizes around the $580 level and makes a run back toward its 50-day average, while any fresh disclosure tied to piracy enforcement or rights-holder talks could move sentiment.

With year-end positioning and a tech-led pullback still in play, Spotify’s next session may hinge on broader risk appetite as much as company-specific headlines.

Khadija Saeed is a financial markets reporter at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, technology and emerging industries. She studied economics and finance at the London School of Economics and previously worked in market research before moving into financial journalism. Her coverage focuses on the companies, innovations and economic trends influencing global investors.

Stock Market Today

  • Wall Street Bets Billions on AI Energy Solutions Amid Power Crunch
    June 27, 2026, 9:48 AM EDT. The artificial intelligence (AI) surge is causing significant energy demand, prompting investors to channel billions into firms aiming to address this power challenge. Wall Street's aggressive funding reflects confidence in emerging technologies, despite some being in early development stages. The focus is on companies promising innovative solutions to the AI energy crunch, highlighting a new frontier in investment driven by AI's expanding infrastructure needs.

Latest articles

Europe heat heats up grid as investors watch low air-con adoption

Europe heat heats up grid as investors watch low air-con adoption

27 June 2026
Europe’s record heatwave is driving double-digit air-conditioner sales growth for Samsung, LG, Midea, and Mitsubishi Electric, but grid stress and soaring power prices—like Britain’s 200 pounds/MWh import deal—signal that surging demand is now a critical test for both cooling-equipment makers and energy systems.
HFCL jumps 10% on heavy volumes even as MarketsMojo keeps “Strong Sell” callNEW YORK, December 29, 2025, 00:11 ET
Previous Story

HFCL jumps 10% on heavy volumes even as MarketsMojo keeps “Strong Sell” callNEW YORK, December 29, 2025, 00:11 ET

Eli Lilly stock dips after hours as Jardiance, Mounjaro price-cut headlines land into 2026
Next Story

Eli Lilly stock dips after hours as Jardiance, Mounjaro price-cut headlines land into 2026

Go toTop